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" Nor, gentlemen, is this belief confined to men of comparative seclusion, since men, the greatest and most distinguished both as philosophers and as monarchs, have enforced this belief, and shown its influence by their conduct. Above all, gentlemen, need... "
The Lives of the Chief Justices of England: From the Norman Conquest Till ... - Page 99
by John Campbell Baron Campbell - 1857 - 587 pages
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The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 106

1857 - 628 pages
...Main — a line I have heard or met with God knows ' wheer.' Coleridge relates in his ' Table Talk ' that Lord Kenyon in addressing the jury in a blasphemy...Christian virtue that he was called Julian the Apostle.' His mixed metaphors have provoked nearly as much censure as his bad Latin ; e. g,, ' If an individual...
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The American Jurist and Law Magazine, Volume 15

Law - 1836 - 544 pages
...philosophers and as monarchs, have enforced this belief, and shown its influence by their conduct. Above all, gentlemen, need I name to you the Emperor...christian virtue, that he was called Julian the Apostle." — (Letters, Conversations and Recollections ofS, T, Coleridge, p. 66.) 1836.] Appointments by the...
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The Parterre of fiction, poetry, history [&c.]., Volume 4

1836 - 422 pages
...philosophers and as monarchs, have enforced this belief, and shewn its influence by their conduct. Above all, gentlemen, need I name to you the Emperor...Christian virtue that he was called Julian the Apostle." If the reader can believe that a judge on the bench would have made such a fool of himself, he may...
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Letters, Conversations, and Recollections of S. T. Coleridge

Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Critics - 1836 - 274 pages
...philosophers and as monarchs, have enforced this belief, and shown its influence by their conduct. Above all, gentlemen, need I name to you the Emperor...Christian virtue that he was called Julian the Apostle.' "* " It is indisputable that nervous excitation is contagious. The greater part of ghost stories may...
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The Monthly Review

Books - 1836 - 636 pages
...philosophers and as monarchs, have enforced this belief, and shown its influence by their conduct. Above all, gentlemen, need I name to you the Emperor...Christian virtue that he was called Julian the Apostle." — vol i. pp. 99, 100. Unmeasured and uncharitable assertions such as these, abound in the present...
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The Monthly review. New and improved ser. New and improved ser, Volume 1

1836 - 646 pages
...philosophers and as monarchs, have enforced this belief, and shown its influence by their conduct. Above all, gen'tlemen, need I name to you the Emperor...every Christian virtue that he was called Julian the Apostle."—vol i. pp. 99, 100. Unmeasured and uncharitable assertions such as these, abound in the...
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The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction, Volume 27

1836 - 456 pages
...monarchs, have enforced this belief, and shown its influence by their conduct. Above all, gentlemen, ueed I name to you the Emperor Julian, who was so celebrated...Christian virtue that he was called Julian the Apostle." It is indisputable that nervous excitation is contagious. The greater part of ghost stories may be...
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The Law Magazine, Or, Quarterly Review of Jurisprudence

Law - 1837 - 494 pages
...examples, which displays a felicitous ignorance that the whole race of Malaprops might have envied. " Above all, gentlemen, need I name to you the emperor...Christian virtue, that he was called Julian the Apostle !" But this story, we believe, is too good to be true. We must in candour confess that the learning...
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The Law Review and Quarterly Journal of British and Foreign ..., Volume 4

International law - 1846 - 518 pages
...examples, which displays a felicitous ignorance that the whole race of Malaprops might have envied. " Above all, gentlemen, need I name to you the emperor...Christian virtue, that he was called Julian the Apostle?" P. 80. Lord Alvanley is made thus to import his own experience in horseflesh into a horse cause : —...
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The Law Review and Quarterly Journal of British and Foreign ..., Volume 4

International law - 1846 - 520 pages
...examples, which displays a felicitous ignorance that the whole race of Malaprops might have envied. " Above all, gentlemen, need I name to you the emperor...Christian virtue, that he was called Julian the Apostle?" P. 80. Lord Alvanley is made thus to import his own experience in horseflesh into a horse cause: —...
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